Biblical Thoughts from a Christian, Martial Artist, Biker, Homeschool Mom (who graduated all her kids!) Library Studies Student.
I write what God is teaching me; I pray that He will use my devotionals to teach you as well.

Sunday, December 29, 2013

I love new beginnings.New days, new weeks, new months, new years.They all provide an opportunity to start
over, to evaluate past mistakes and put them away and look forward to, and even
plan, something new and better.That
brings to mind a wonderful verse about new beginnings for Believers.

Lamentations 3:22-23:The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases,
His mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is Your
faithfulness.

We wake up each morning to a new
day, filled with new opportunities to show our love for Christ.Some days, even some years, we fail.But God’s steadfast love never fails, His
mercy never comes to an end, and He gives us a new chance every single
day.I am wavering and often unfaithful,
but He never is.Never.

As I look forward to a New
Year, 2014, I have made a few resolutions.There are things in my life I want to change.Get back in shape physically.Become a better person spiritually.Be more self-disciplined.Live more, love more, laugh more.Live in the now but hope in eternity.Those all sound great, don’t they?But it’s not enough to have those grand general
ideas, I have to translate them into actual daily practice.No, I’m not going to list mine for you, but I
have spent some time writing down specific, doable goals for myself under those
broad categories, and I encourage you to do the same for yourself.

Having said that, I have been
thinking a lot about some things related to New Year’s resolutions, and would
like to write about two of them.

The first resolution I want to
write about is simple – spending time in God’s Word.No matter what your other resolutions are,
this is foundational to the life of a Believer.I encourage you to set a goal for daily reading. It doesn’t have to be a huge amount, just a
bit each day will make a huge difference in your life. This year I plan to read the Bible all the way
through.It’s not something I can manage
every year, but when I did it several years ago it really changed the way I
understand the Bible as a whole.Back
then I found a chronological reading plan to follow.In years past I have also listened to an audio Bible andreally liked that.This year I plan to follow Tabletalk’s
reading plan, which consists of Old and New Testament readings each day.It is listed in Tabletalk Devotional Magazine,
which I have been reading for several years, and that makes it easy for me to
keep up with.There are lots of
different programs, some even have an app for yourphone.Here is a link for several
different programs to choose from.Set a reasonable goal and go with it!

The other thing I have been thinking a lot
about is living in the now.Being
totally in the here and now.We live in
a perpetually ADD society.There is
always background noise, and we have forgotten how to just be still and
quiet.Phones that keep up with text and
e-mail and facebook and twitter and video games and music and even movies, go
everywhere we go.Our brains keep up
with all that stuff and all that noise 24/7.Life is no longer living life, it has become a huge escape from reality.We have replaced relationships with texting
and facebook.We have replaced sports
and fun activities with video games and wii.We have replaced quiet moments thoughtfulness and reading with a constant stream of
music and video.We have replaced
participation with entertainment.

So this year I plan to unplug more
of my life.No, I can’t unplug
completely and still live in the world I have to live in, but I can unplug in a
lot of places.I can unplug when I am
with a live person and focus completely on them.I can unplug for more meals with my family
rather than meals with the TV.I can
unplug for my appointment with God every day.I can unplug to think or thoughtfully read a book.I can unplug and actually go do things.I can even choose to stay unplugged except
for pre-determined time periods.I
suspect I may find that much of my plugged in life is like an addiction, and
will be harder to manage than it sounds.I wonder how ADD and a constantly plugged in life and addictions are
related?

As I wrote this my mom walked into the room, and it was so hard to turn this off and talk to her! But isn’t that the point?Isn’t that what God calls me to?To live life that is happening right now?To really put myself into the very real relationships in front of me?In fact, isn’t that what Jesus did?Immanuel, God with us?Can I imitate Christ in that respect and enter into relationship with others the way He entered into the life of mankind as Baby in the manger, and Savior when He saved me?

Monday, December 23, 2013

1.Cooking is more important than cleaning.In fact, eating is most important of all.

2.Turn on Christmas music.Reminders of the omniscient Santa Clause watching
you will help.

3.Don’t bother to clean first.Especially kitchen floors.

4.Except do keep the dishwasher running.24/7.You’ll be glad you did.

5.Do not just dump the bag of flour into the flour
tin.Who the heck made a flour tin
smaller than a bag of flour?!

6.Refer to lesson 2.

7.Do not double the pumpkin bread recipe.I don’t care how many old packages of pumpkin
you need to use because you found them in the bottom of your freezer yesterday.Crap!The mixer is overflowing before you can even get the flour in it!

8.Refer to lesson 2.

9.When in need of a huge mixing bowl the top to
your cake carrier works great.

10.Dang, no matter how many loads of dishes you do,
that huge mixing bowl/cake carrier won’t fit in the dishwasher.

11.When you have used every bread pan and mini
bread pan and muffin tin you own, the cast iron skillet works great.

12.Wash dishes.Sweep floor.Mop if must.OR even better:

13.Go type up a list of silly things you thought
about while you were messing up your kitchen.

Monday, December 16, 2013

I recently read Crazy Love by Francis Chan, and I was pleasantly surprised. I guess it's the skeptic in me that expects all popular preachers to be light and fluffy, but this book wasn't. I am not a book reviewer... but below are some things I highlighted as I read the book.

Some might say that Francis is a bit of an idealist in
thinking that one life can really make a dent in the world.But I would say that Francis is the ultimate
realist.Meaning, someone who believes
that God is really who He says He is and that the true reality of this life is
to follow Him wholeheartedly.p.12,
Chris Tomlin

When you get your own universe, you can make your own
standards.When we disagree, let’s not
assume it’s His reasoning that needs correction.p.24

When I am consumed by my problems – stressed out about my life, my family, and my job – I
actually convey the belief that I think the circumstances are more important
than God’s command to always rejoice.In
other words, that I have a “right” to disobey God because of the magnitude of
my responsibilities.p.29

Worry implies that we don’t quite trust that God is big
enough, powerful enough, or loving enough to take care of what’s happening in
our lives.

Stress says that the things we are involved in are important
enough to merit our impatience, our lack of grace toward others, or our tight
grip of control.p.29

Basically, these 2 behaviors communicate that it’s okay to
sin and not trust God because the stuff in my life is somehow exceptional.Both worry and stress reek of arrogance.They declare our tendency to forget that
we’ve been forgiven, that our lives here are brief, that we are headed to a
place where we won’t be lonely, afraid, or hurt ever again, and that in the
context of God’s strength, our problems are small indeed.p.30

The irony is that while God doesn’t need us but still wants
us, we desperately need God but don’t really want Him most of the time.p.42

O God, I have tasted Thy goodness, and it has both satisfied
me and made me thirsty for more, I am painfully conscious of my need for
further grace, I am ashamed of my lack of desire, O God, the Triune God, I want
to want Thee; I long to be filled with longing; I thirst to be made more
thirsty still.Show me Thy glory, I pray
Thee, so that I may know Thee indeed.Begin in mercy a new work of love within me.Say to my soul, “Rise up my love, my fir one,
and come away.”Then give me grace to
rise and follow Thee up from this misty lowland where I have wandered so long.p.67, A.W. Tozer

His counsel wasn’t to “try harder”, but rather to let Him
in.p.70

As we begin to focus more on Christ, loving Him and others
becomes more natural.As long as we are
pursuing Him, we are satisfied in Him.It is when we stop actively loving Him that we find ourselves restless
and gravitating toward other means of fulfillment.p.71

This is true joy in life, the being used up for a purpose
recognized by yourself as a mighty one; the being a force of nature instead of
a feverish, selfish little clod of ailments and grievances complaining that the
world will not devote itself to making you happy.p.73, George Bernard Shaw

Never make principle out of your experience; let God be as
original with other people as He is with you.p. 109, Oswald Chambers

You do not need to preach to your pastor or congregation;
you simply need to live out in your daily life the love and obedience that God
has asked of you.p.113

Q: What do you tell people who say that you are taking the
Bible too literally?

A:
If someone told me that I took the Bible too literally, I would really get them
to question their own heart. I would ask them if they really believed that
we’re not supposed to take it that literally, or if it’s the influence of other
believers who say we’re not supposed to. I like to get people to think for
themselves and not just go with the flow. When believers are alone with the
Word, they come to the same conclusion that I do. Crazy Love appeals to
thoughts that all Christians have had when they’re alone with God, and they
realize that they are supposed to take Scripture literally. These are the
things they should do.

Monday, December 9, 2013

We sang this in church Sunday morning and it has been running through my
head ever since. It is an old hymn, yet not one I was familiar with...
definitely need to listen to it enough to learn it.

The last few days I have been meditating through Hebrews chapter 12.
At the end of that chapter the author describes the fear of the Israelites as
they approached the mountain of God with Moses, and compares that to our
approach to Mount Zion with Christ. Fire and smoke and the realization
that if they or any animal touched it they would die... compared to "but
you have come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly
Jerusalem, and to innumerable angels in festal gathering, and to the assembly
of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and
to the spirits of the righteous made perfect, and to Jesus, the mediator of a
new covenant, and to the sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the
blood of Abel."

The contrast in these two worlds is quite remarkable. Approach with my
own righteousness and find fear and death, or approach with the righteousness
of Christ and find eternal life.The
writer then goes on to say that physical things, such as the mountain
of Moses, will be shaken and destroyed, but the kingdom we receive
cannot be shaken. He ends the chapter with, "Therefore let us be
grateful for receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, and thus let us offer
to God acceptable worship, with reverence and awe, for our God is a consuming
fire."

How often is our worship like that? Gratefulness, reverence, awe -
those are apparently part of acceptable worship. As enjoyable as it is, contemporary
worship is rarely reverent. But mechanically singing old hymns is not
grateful and there is no awe there. Maybe worship is not what we
typically think it is. Gratefulness, reverence, awe - they seem to
describe the attitude of the heart, not the music of the church. And
it's apparently not just about music, music isn't even part of this passage.It seems to me that gratefulness, reverence
and awe have to come into the church within me, in my own heart, not be
generated by the service or the music or the preaching that is happening around
me.

Yesterday I was in Psalm 22, and these words jumped out at me, "From
You comes my praise in the great congregation..." From God comes my
praise in the worship service. It comes from God and goes to God... what
does that say about my role here? I am not a spectator watching a worship
service, and I am not just responding to what is going on around me in a
worship service. God is speaking to me (and has been all week), I am
listening and responding to Him, realizing what He has done for me with
gratefulness, realizing His power and position and my own sin and responding
accordingly, that is, with reverence and awe.

Gratefulness, reverence, awe - something to carry inside you as you enter
into worship.Now, read the words of the
hymn at the beginning of the post; meditate on them and pray them and feel the power
of those words, and approach God with gratefulness, reverence and awe.

Before the throne of God above
I have a strong and perfect plea.
A great high Priest whose Name is Love
Who ever lives and pleads for me.
My name is graven on His hands,
My name is written on His heart.
I know that while in Heaven He stands
No tongue can bid me thence depart.

When Satan tempts me to despair
And tells me of the guilt within,
Upward I look and see Him there
Who made an end of all my sin.
Because the sinless Savior died
My sinful soul is counted free.
For God the just is satisfied
To look on Him and pardon me.

Behold Him there the risen Lamb,
My perfect spotless righteousness,
The great unchangeable I AM,
The King of glory and of grace,
One in Himself I cannot die.
My soul is purchased by His blood,
My life is hid with Christ on high,
With Christ my Savior and my God!

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Hard to believe it's been 1 1/2 yrs since I posted anything. Life has just been so busy and stressful there hasn't been time or energy left for anything non-essential.

Thankfully God has been changing that for me, and for the first time in several years I do not feel completely exhausted! I have been writing; not really devotionals, more like journaling through scripture, although several ideas for devotionals have crossed my mind... and I was thinking maybe it's time to start putting things in print again.

No real goals here, but if I can post something every couple of weeks I will be a happy camper!

About Me

Please Do Not post my writing elsewhere on the internet, free or otherwise, without permission. Do Not sell electronic copies or hard copies of my writing. The rights to all the devotionals, articles, personal images and stories on this site are owned by Rebecca A Givens unless otherwise stated.